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Jun 3, 2026
This week’s theme
Book titles that became words

This week’s words
brave new world
deipnosophist
Lord of the Flies

Lord of the Flies
The original UK book cover
Cover art: Anthony Gross

Wordsmith Games
🧩Jigsaw Riddle
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🌍Langitude
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A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Garg

Lord of the Flies

PRONUNCIATION:
(lord uv thuh FLAIZ)

MEANING:
adjective: Marked by a breakdown of order into cruelty, chaos, and savagery.

ETYMOLOGY:
After Lord of the Flies (1954), a novel by William Golding. Earliest documented use: 1969.

NOTES:
In the novel, a group of English schoolboys are stranded on an uninhabited island after a plane crash. At first, they try to establish rules and live together peacefully, but their makeshift society descends into cruelty and savagery.

The title refers to Beelzebub, from Hebrew ba’al-zebub (lord of flies), the name of a Philistine god of the city of Ekron. In later Christian tradition, Beelzebub became identified with the prince of demons, or Satan.

USAGE:
“[HackForums] members were a shade more advanced in their skills and a shade murkier in their ethics: a Lord of the Flies collection of young hackers seeking to impress one another with nihilistic feats of exploitation.”
Andy Greenberg; The Confessions Of Marcus Hutchins; Wired (San Francisco, California); Jun 2020.

“[David Cameron, Boris Johnson, et al, were] all members of a secret society, a Lord of the Flies rich-boy club known for spectacular drunkenness and casual destructiveness.”
Michael Wolff; Cameron Obscura; Vanity Fair (New York); Apr 2010.

A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
There are many forms of patriotism and telling the truth is one of them. -Anderson Cooper, journalist and commentator (b. 3 Jun 1967)

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